17

I have heard that authors can do 5000 words an hour with dictation. For a six-hour day writing, that is 30,000 words. Thus it would take less than three days to complete a standard novel manuscript.

Since I've also heard that writers produce much better quality work by dictating, this seems to mean that they wouldn't have to spend too much time on revision or editing other than correcting a few minor mistakes here and there. Even with normal typing, writers like Dean Wesley Smith don't do much editing and never use editors.

This obviously means that we can expect to see prolific writers churning out new 100,000 word novels every week (at least) as dictation technology becomes more widely used.

Am I right in this assumption? Or where am I wrong?

Liquid
  • 15,845
  • 4
  • 49
  • 117
user394536
  • 2,174
  • 9
  • 22
  • I'm not sure if any fiction writer can be that much productive, but for someone like blogger this can make a difference. – Alexander Jan 11 '19 at 00:32
  • 27
    That's worth reading? I suppose if you're a prodigal genius, but your talents would be wasted by not instead exploring the mysteries of the cosmos. Hawking probably could if he still had use of his vocal cords, if you wanted to hear about quantum physics and black holes for eight hours. – Mazura Jan 11 '19 at 04:54
  • 5
    Enid Blyton wrote more than 50 books in a year during her most prolific period, that's about a book per week. The quality might have been what it was but they did sell like hotcakes. – Moyli Jan 11 '19 at 13:15
  • Compare NaNoWriMo. – user Jan 11 '19 at 14:38
  • 81
    I don't think creative writing's bottleneck is typing speed. – henning Jan 11 '19 at 15:14
  • 35
    writers produce much better quality work by dictating That's a Citation Needed if I ever heard one. Assuming by "better quality" you mean fewer typographical errors, the results are still going to be heavily dependent on both the software correctly interpreting what the writer is saying (especially where homophones, punctuation, etc are concerned) and the individual writer's ability to form coherent sentences without stuttering or needing to adjust their phrasing/grammar after the fact. Are you sure this applies to dictation software and not just authors who dictate to a fellow human? – jmbpiano Jan 11 '19 at 17:16
  • 11
    @Mazura I think Hawking's biggest issue right now is being dead. – forest Jan 12 '19 at 10:34
  • Speed: You can dictate 5000 words/hour. I can type about 6000 words /hour. 2) Quality: My writing is better than my speaking. 3) "obviously": Typically, "obviously" implies an oversimplification.
  • – Sebastian Mach Jan 14 '19 at 13:12
  • Writing speed can vary, for example, between 125 words a day for Tolkien, to 1 word per minute for Asimov. (source: xkcd What If?) Neither get close to 30 000 words a day. – Sanchises Jan 14 '19 at 13:37
  • The National Novel Writing Month program sets as it's challenge a goal of 50,000 words in a month and having participated in several events, I can say it is tough to do (I try to shoot for a goal of ~1,500 words per day which is under the actual math of words needed, but I write to end of scene regardless. 1,500 is easier to chunk into short segments of 500 maybe 30 minutes of typing through out the day. That doesn't include pre-planning at all, which for my successful runs, took me a year if not more.). To say nothing of editing, revising, and what have you. – hszmv Aug 19 '22 at 11:28